Pyrenula


Pyrenula is a genus of lichen-forming fungi in the family Pyrenulaceae. The genus has a widespread distribution, especially in tropical regions, and contains about 200 species.

Taxonomy

The genus was circumscribed in 1814 by Erik Acharius. Acharius distinguished Pyrenula by its crustose thallus that forms a flat, closely attached, uniform crust, and its characteristic wart-like structures that either protrude from or encircle the fruiting bodies. The genus is characterized by simple, thick-walled, black perithecia with papillate ostioles, and spherical chambers containing a cellular mass that becomes powdery at maturity.
Subsequent work has shown that Pyrenula is the dominant genus of the family Pyrenulaceae, containing the majority of its more than 300 described species, many of them tropical microlichens. A detailed revision of material assigned to P. andina and P. mastophoroides demonstrated that these names had been used for a heterogeneous assemblage of at least 17 taxa: only the type collections actually represent those two species, while other specimens proved to be misidentifications, previously overlooked species, or taxa wrongly placed in synonymy. By combining such as thallus and perithecial morphology, the structure and of the, ascospore size and type, and the presence and position of lichexanthone, that study reinstated P. flavicans from synonymy and described eight additional species, and argued for a much narrower application of species names within the genus.

Description

Pyrenula is a genus of crustose lichens, which form thin, crust-like growths that are usually embedded in the surface of bark, though occasionally they develop more visibly on the surface. The thallus is generally smooth and continuous, but in some species it may be cracked into small, plate-like sections known as. Small white spots, which assist with gas exchange, may be present in some species. The —a photosynthetic partner that supplies nutrients—is typically a green alga from the genus Trentepohlia, though it may be absent or reduced in some cases.
The reproductive structures are flask-shaped perithecia, which are usually immersed in the thallus or break through the surface. These perithecia are black and range from roughly spherical to somewhat flattened in shape. Each is surrounded by an, a layer that spreads out and blends with the . This structure consists of fungal filaments mixed with bark fragments and often contains crystalline inclusions. The itself is usually brown and may react with potassium hydroxide solution by becoming darker. Colourless calcium oxalate crystals, which dissolve in dilute hydrochloric acid but not in KOH, are frequently present. The opening through which spores are released may be positioned at the top or slightly to the side of the perithecium.
Inside, the spore-producing tissue may include a gel that stains weakly blue or greenish in iodine and is sometimes filled with tiny oil droplets. Some parts of the hymenium may also contain anthraquinone pigments, which are orange-brown and turn purple-red when treated with potassium hydroxide. The, a network of sterile filaments between the asci, initially consists of sparsely septate, branched filaments called. These are gradually replaced by more regular, unbranched paraphyses. Short hair-like structures called line the ostiole.
The asci are long and cylindrical with a multilayered wall structure. They are stalked and have a thickened apex containing a subapical cap that is visible under a microscope, but they do not stain in iodine. Spore release is, meaning the different layers of the ascus wall separate to allow the spores to escape. The ascospores are usually ellipsoidal to spindle-shaped, with rounded or pointed ends. They are thick-walled and divided by several septa, forming either three internal partitions or a more complex pattern. All septa are , and the cell interiors may appear lens-shaped or angular. The spores vary in colour from pale to dark brown and lack an outer gelatinous coating.
Asexual reproduction occurs in black, spherical structures called pycnidia, which may be simple or chambered. These produce long, slender to strongly curved, colourless conidia that do not have internal divisions. Chemical analysis reveals the presence of compounds such as lichexanthone and various unidentified anthraquinones in some species, while others contain no detectable lichen products. Members of Pyrenula typically grow on relatively smooth bark in moist, shaded habitats.